2023 AIChE Annual Meeting
(175a) Contribution to the Circular Economy from the Use of Tannery Hair Biochar for the Removal of Emerging Compounds in Polluted Water
Authors
For the removal of drugs, two different tests were carried out: one for 28 days and the other for 4 hours, in order to evaluate the efficiency and the percentage of removal. It was found that the biochar obtained at 450 ºC is the one that presents the best efficiencies and that after being activated, the efficiency increases considerably. With the biochar at 450 ºC, removals of 90% of AMOX and more than 80% of DFC were achieved.
By examining it, biochar made from waste tannery hair has these qualities and is an excellent adsorbent. As removal percentages of more than 60% were achieved in this example for each medication, it is possible to claim that good removal percentages are provided when examining medicines separately or in mixes. The findings of this investigation allow us to draw the conclusion that pyrolysis of tannery hair at 450 °C results in a carbon with physicochemical properties acceptable for use as an absorbent. This carbon enables the removal of newly developing contaminants like antibiotics. Because biochar may partially eliminate the developing pollutants found in traditional treatment systems, its application would ensure improvements in the process. This could be accomplished by adding filtration columns or fixed bed filters after the standard filtration procedure or after the coagulation, flocculation, and sedimentation procedures. On the other hand, by forgoing a typical treatment for a waste that is deemed dangerous, pyrolysis creates a new product and a new stage within the leather industry's value chain by adding value to it. Similar to how tannery hair waste can be fully utilized by undergoing an alternative value-added treatment, the manufacturing of leather can be improved by making it more environmentally friendly.
References
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